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With peer-to-peer fundraising, you don't have one fundraising page — you potentially have hundreds, with all the personal fundraising pages raising funds on your behalf.

Here are five steps that will equip you to construct and implement your own unique peer-to-peer fundraising strategy.

1. Assess Yourself

Is peer-to-peer fundraising the right strategy for you? Before thinking of events or campaign pages, ask yourself these essential questions to determine if you have the makings of a flourishing peer-to-peer fundraising campaign:

Does your nonprofit have a unique story?

Do you need to raise a lot of funds in a short period?

Is your audience likely to be an ambassador for your cause?

Does your cause have a tie-in with a current news topic, holiday, crisis, or event?

Are you looking to grow your community in a different way than before?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, you're ready to move onto the next step to create a peer-to-peer fundraising campaign!

2. Pick Your Peer-To-Peer Fundraising Strategy

Having a fundraising strategy that coincides with your goals and audience will help grow engagement organically. Consider these three types of peer-to-peer fundraising strategies to determine what works best for your nonprofit.

Campaign

This fundraising strategy runs for a fixed time and has an overall goal; personal fundraisers set their own personal goals to work toward the overall goal. For example, the Carlisle Family YMCA raised $83,607 to provide scholarships for children in need to participate in its programs by setting a goal and engaging individuals to raise money with personal and team fundraising pages.

Personal

This fundraising strategy has no fixed time and no overall goal; personal fundraisers set their own fundraising and impact goals. For example, a group of friends called Team Christian raised $27,000 on CauseVox for physical therapy sessions.

Activity

This fundraising strategy has a fixed period up to the date of the activity and no specific overall goal. People often organize into teams to participate and raise funds, and physical action is required. For example, in 2014 WOD for Water raised $212,174 around a CrossFit workout event to bring clean water to villages in India, Cambodia, and south Sudan.

Not all strategies work for every nonprofit, so assessing what kinds of campaigns your supporters would be more likely to participate in will help guide you in the right direction.

3. Craft Your Unique Story

Your nonprofit has an amazing story to tell, but how you communicate that story can make all the difference. To tell your story in a way that resonates with your audience, keep in mind the following pointers:

Posing a question to your audience can get them interested in what your cause is about. Introduce your protagonist early on and what he or she wants.

Explain the conflict the protagonist faced and what was at stake in the most real way possible.

Show how your protagonist grew from that experience.

Use that story as a representation of so many more, and relate it to your vision.

Stories are incredibly powerful in the way that they move people. Use yours to engage and empower your audience!

4. Set Up Your Campaign Site

A key aspect to running any kind of peer-to-peer fundraising strategy is creating your website to effectively convey all the information you want to communicate to your fundraisers and donors. It's important that your site contains

A unified look and feel that goes along with your brand identity.

An invitation for people to donate or sign up for a personal fundraising page or team.

Pictures, videos, and text to help share your story, and one clear ask.

Your impact goal, fundraising goal, and timeline.

When you have a site that communicates to your audience clearly and allows people to join in to donate or raise funds on your behalf, your campaign is in an optimal place to flourish.

5. Come Up with a Communications Strategy

Setting up your campaign is only half the battle. The other is about reaching out to your audience to get them on board to raise funds or donate. The key is to use multiple outlets to best promote your campaign:

Create a plan for emailing your supporters about your campaign before, during, and after it runs.

Send supporters a toolkit that includes a social media plan they can follow, logos, videos, and exclusive content.

Work with partners and board members who will engage their community around your campaign.

Find a hero. Is there a celebrity, even a local one who would champion your cause?